Two hundred thousand dollars in city property from the mayor's office is missing or damaged. There are new controversies building for former Mayor Luke Ravenstahl, and current Mayor Bill Peduto is directing the matters to the FBI for review.

There was already an ongoing federal grand jury review of Pittsburgh city government under Ravenstahl's administration. Now Peduto's team says Ravenstahl took his city taxpayers-owned desktop computer from the mayor's office and didn't return it until the city's Computer Information Services staff started asking questions.

"The concern is that belonged to the public, you know that's not yours. But it's not just a computer that's missing, that's damaged. There's over $200,000 worth (of items)," Peduto said.

The city says expensive antiques -- including a chandelier and a portrait of William Pitt -- were discovered damaged after Ravenstahl was out and Peduto was in. The portrait was found stashed in a storage closet, partially torn.

Add an antique clock to the list of items reported missing from the mayor's office. It sat for years on a mantel in the conference room where Pittsburgh mayors have held news conferences. A Waterford crystal Super Bowl trophy and a valuable vase that was a gift to the city of Pittsburgh from China had previously been reported as missing, with the Peduto administration tracing the disappearance to Ravenstahl's exit.

Pittsburgh's Action News 4 knocked on the door of Ravenstahl's home but was unable to reach him for comment. Requests to Ravenstahl's attorney, Chuck Porter, for comment have also gone unanswered.

Peduto said he has not attempted to speak to Ravenstahl about the missing and damaged items.

"No, no. In fact, we're not approaching the former mayor, we're not approaching his attorney. We're talking about nearly $200,000 in missing and damaged property that belongs to the public. It goes to the FBI at this level," Peduto said.

"It's under their investigation as to whether there are any charges that will come from this. That's for law enforcement to decide," said Kevin Acklin, Peduto's chief of staff.

No one's answering questions about what was on the computer's hard drive before or after its disappearance.

"That's under investigation by the federal authorities," said Acklin.

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